• Title of article

    Bioprintable, cell-laden silk fibroin–gelatin hydrogel supporting multilineage differentiation of stem cells for fabrication of three-dimensional tissue constructs

  • Author/Authors

    Das، نويسنده , , Sanskrita and Pati، نويسنده , , Falguni and Choi، نويسنده , , Yeong-Jin and Rijal، نويسنده , , Girdhari and Shim، نويسنده , , Jinhyung and Kim، نويسنده , , Sung Won and Ray، نويسنده , , Alok R. and Cho، نويسنده , , Dong-Woo and Ghosh، نويسنده , , Sourabh، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
  • Pages
    14
  • From page
    233
  • To page
    246
  • Abstract
    Bioprinting has exciting prospects for printing three-dimensional (3-D) tissue constructs by delivering living cells with appropriate matrix materials. However, progress in this field is currently extremely slow due to limited choices of bioink for cell encapsulation and cytocompatible gelation mechanisms. Here we report the development of clinically relevant sized tissue analogs by 3-D bioprinting, delivering human nasal inferior turbinate tissue-derived mesenchymal progenitor cells encapsulated in silk fibroin–gelatin (SF–G) bioink. Gelation in this bioink was induced via in situ cytocompatible gelation mechanisms, namely enzymatic crosslinking by mushroom tyrosinase and physical crosslinking via sonication. Mechanistically, tyrosinases oxidize the accessible tyrosine residues of silk and/or gelatin into reactive o-quinone moieties that can either condense with each other or undergo nonenzymatic reactions with available amines of both silk and gelatin. Sonication alters the hydrophobic interaction and accelerates self-assembly of silk fibroin macromolecules to form β-sheet crystals, which physically crosslink the hydrogel. However, sonication has no effect on the conformation of gelatin. The effect of optimized rheology, secondary conformations of silk–gelatin bioink, temporally controllable gelation strategies and printing parameters were assessed to achieve maximum cell viability and multilineage differentiation of the encapsulated human nasal inferior turbinate tissue-derived mesenchymal progenitor cells. This strategy offers a unique path forward in the direction of direct printing of spatially customized anatomical architecture in a patient-specific manner.
  • Keywords
    Bioprinting , Silk–gelatin bioink , Cytocompatible gelation , Self-standing 3-D construct , Multilineage differentiation
  • Journal title
    Acta Biomaterialia
  • Serial Year
    2015
  • Journal title
    Acta Biomaterialia
  • Record number

    1758674